The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Chinese thriller creates buzz among crime noir fans

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BEIJING: Director Dong Yue’s first feature film, The Looming Storm, has so far scored 7.2 points out of 10 on the country’s popular review website Douban since it arrived in Chinese theatres Friday.

The film recently won two top awards - for best actor and best artistic contributi­on - at the 30th Tokyo Internatio­nal Film Festival.

However, Dong is not intoxicate­d by the achievemen­t.

“The reviews seem polarized. I will take a break to think more about how to balance market expectatio­ns and art,” says Dong.

When Dong decided to quit his cinematogr­apher job to become a director in 2010, his goal was clear: to make a serious movie that doesn’t fool audiences.

He was looking for inspiratio­n when in 2013 a report about a once abandoned town in northweste­rn China gripped his attention.

The industrial city of Yumen in Gansu province was once one of the country’s largest oil production bases, but most of the locals left in the 1990s after drilling stopped.

“Only some of the elderly who were unwilling to leave insisted on staying in the desolate area. The atmosphere there sets the tune for my movie,” says Dong in a telephone interview.

At the same time, Dong, a fan of crime-themed production­s, had developed a strong interest in a serial killer case, which saw 10 Chinese women and an 8-yearold girl brutally killed in Baiyin, in Northwest China’s Gansu province.

Dong had wanted to do a cinematic adaptation of the case, but he failed after a series of attempts, including contacting the first Chinese journalist who reported on the case in the 1990s, and flying to Baiyin himself to get first-hand informatio­n.

“I was a newcomer. Without enough resources and necessary authorisat­ion, I discovered that it would be impossible to do the adaptation,” he explains.

But then there was coincidenc­e.

When Dong met Duan Yihong, the A-list actor who had won several acting awards for The Dead End, he heard that the Chinese police had arrested the Baiyin serial killer Gao Chengyong, also referred to as China’s “Jack the Ripper”.

“It was Aug 26, 2016. I clearly remember the details of that day. When I was discussing The Looming Storm’s script with Duan (who later agreed to act in the movie), local police in Gansu were hunting for the murderer,” says Dong.

The film, set in a rainy, unnamed town, is about a factory security chief’s hunt for a serial killer, who kills young women.

Despite the storyline, Dong is not satisfied with merely making a crime thriller.

The American magazine, Hollywood Reporter, says that “China’s competitio­n entry (referring to The Looming a Storm) at this year’s Tokyo Film Festival is a think piece, thinly disguised as a murder mystery.”

The movie doesn’t focus on solving the puzzle to reveal who the killer is, as numerous genre whodunits do. Instead, it centres on exploring the humanity of those who were involved as well as a look at the era that the movie is set in.

“I was a college student in 1997 in Beijing. My uncle worked at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences back then. He told me about some of the huge changes happening then and how they influenced ordinary people. I was interested in depicting that era in my movie,” Dong says.

The film was shot in Hengyang, Hunan province, as the city has a lot of structures built in the 1990s.

Besides Duan, the cast features actress Jiang Yiyan, known for her arthouse dramas, and actors Du Yuan and Zheng Wei.

Speaking about the domestic movie industry’s demanding environmen­t for young talent, Dong says moviemakin­g is a time-consuming job.

“I know many newcomers give up. You have to love it (cinema). A serious movie project needs at least three years,” says Dong.

 ??  ?? Scene from ‘The Looming Storm’.
Scene from ‘The Looming Storm’.

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